Ryan Bachoo
Lead Editor-Newsgathering
ryan.bachoo@cnc3.co.tt
Sanya Mathura was leading a lubrication training out in St Maarten when a man put his hand up and asked about her background and competency to train him. “My background is whatever is behind me,” she joked, but Mathura knew where he was going with this. She retold the story to the Sunday Guardian’s WE Magazine, “He said, “No. I need to know if you are technically competent to speak to me on this subject.’”
For someone with a BSc in Electrical & Computer Engineering and an MSc in Engineering Asset Management, it was an easy question for Mathura to answer. She attained her Machinery Lubrication Engineer (MLE) certification from the International Council of Machinery Lubrication (ICML) and was the first in this country to secure this certification and the first female at that.
Yet, such a scenario of men questioning the competency of women in STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics) is common. It is so common, that Mathura has spent the last seven years empowering women in such fields. So much so, that she published a book in December 2022 titled “Empowering Women in STEM”. It is one of six books she has written and two of those surround women in STEM.
“It’s a very male-populated industry–when I say dominated people get upset, so it’s a very male-populated industry. That is one of the things that I am trying to change with everything I am doing. I believe women can think about things very differently in so many ways,” Mathura said.
According to statistics from the Energy Chamber of T&T in 2022, the downstream contractor labour force was predominantly male, with just 12 per cent of the labour force being female in 2021. Over the pandemic period, the number of females in the contractor labour force fell even more sharply than the number of males. During 2019, the last full pre-pandemic year, the per cent of female workers was 14 per cent or over 2,000 female workers. This fell by almost 50 per cent by 2021, when there were just over 1,000 female workers in the contractor labour force, compared to a drop of 38 per cent for the male labour force in the same period.
Such numbers startle Mathura, and that is why she has moved to address the decline. However, she said her work aims to empower both women and men.
“When I wrote the books, I said there was not going to be any bashing of men in this. Even though we talk about empowering women in STEM, it is about the guys as well because we can’t get here without the guys, and we can’t stay here without the guys,” she explained.
Mathura insists one cannot exist without the other in industry life, and both can surely coexist in “male-populated industries.”
She said, “When you’re out on a plant, for example, you want to know that the people that are out there with you have your back, cause should something go wrong–and things go wrong–you want to be able to rely on them. You don’t want to be in an environment where you feel so unsafe that you don’t trust anybody else outside of other random female colleagues that you have. That’s why every time I’m promoting women in STEM, we’re also promoting the guys, we’re also promoting the allies because we can’t do it without them.”
Yet, despite some strong allies in men, Mathura has seen many women struggle in STEM industries across the world. She said that after five years in the workplace for women engineers, they usually leave for another field. This is mainly driven by what she said was discrimination and witticism that is aimed at the weaknesses of women. For example, their physical strength in the workplace.
As Mathura found out, whether she is working in the industry or running a business, she will face similar challenges in different ways.
Having started the company Strategic Reliability Solutions Ltd, one day she introduced the business to a “prestigious organisation” in T&T and was asked, “‘Who is the guy who came up with the idea for this company?’” She sighed.
In her writings and practice, Mathura has aimed to show the strength of women in STEM and what they bring to the table. She told us, “Women are important because we think differently. We analyse situations differently. It goes back to a nature and nurture thing. When you do the analysis, and you think about all the research, men analyse things in a very practical way. Women do that too, but sometimes when women analyse things, they go to a creative route, and that’s the best way to do some things. Practical is good, but there are also times when we need to think outside the box.”
As an advocate for women in STEM, she has also been trying to change the narrative surrounding women and family life. Mathura said when women have to go through different changes in their lives, from getting married to getting pregnant to starting a family and including their menstrual cycle, their bosses are constantly strategizing how to cope with their absence. “That should not be a deterrent,” she said. Instead, Mathura is adamant that women should not have to choose between their family and career.
Growing up, she always knew she wanted to be an engineer, but she didn’t have any female engineers to look up to. This is where she seeks to inspire those who now hold the same dream she once had.
She further explained, “One of the main things I always try to do is be the change that I wanted to see. Be the role model for the other people who would not have had that opportunity, so you see a brown girl from the Caribbean on a stage in the United States talking about lubrication, and you’re like, I can do that too. If you want to be able to do these things, you have to be able to see people doing these things.”
Despite all the challenges women face in STEM, Mathura said she was seeing steady progress. “We are getting there. It’s a slow progression, but we are getting there. We have a lot of women starting to get to these higher positions.”
Mathura is only in her mid-30s and has been working tirelessly to reshape how women are viewed within STEM industries. It comes after she endured setbacks as a young engineer.
Her lasting words for women within the energy industry and STEM were, “Just be yourself. Don’t let the industry change you. Don’t let them put the barriers on you. Don’t let them say you cannot wear pink or do your nails. When they tell you that, tell them to get a pair of gloves for you.”
With inclusivity being at the centre of global conversations, particularly when it comes to women in STEM and the energy sector, Mathura is adamant she doesn’t want to remove men from the table, but instead add more seats where women can be part of the discussion, have their voices heard, and contribute in a genuine way to better industry standards.
Having felt the sting of inequity in her industry, Sanya Mathura will not cease in her determination to stamp it out until the last woman stops enduring discrimination.